Trump mocks the stuttering that Joe Biden showed during his State of the Union speech

Especial

This Saturday, during a campaign event in Rome, Georgia, former President Donald Trump, who is seeking to become the Republican presidential candidate, mocked the stuttering that President Joe Biden showed during his State of the Union speech.

"Two nights ago, we all heard 'Crooked Joe's' angry, dark, and hate-filled diatribe in a State of the Union speech, didn't we? (...) 'U-u-u-unite the country? I'm going to unite it.' No. It's a threat to democracy," Trump said.

In the context of the upcoming presidential primary elections to be held in that state on March 12, Trump addressed his supporters accusing Biden's administration of being a failure.

More: Family separation, exploitation, and labor abuse are the main crimes faced by migrants, warn lawyers in the US

Likewise, Trump lashed out at his opponent. "If he (Biden) is the best a party can nominate, we are in trouble."

The Republican once again made migration a central theme of his speech and again blamed Biden for the death of University of Georgia student Laken Hope Riley, allegedly killed by an undocumented immigrant of Venezuelan origin.

"Joe Biden has no remorse, no regret, no empathy, no compassion and, worst of all, no intention of stopping the deadly invasion that stole the beautiful American life from precious Laken," Trump said, who met with the student's parents before starting his speech.

The young woman's death has been capitalized by Republicans to blame the Biden administration for the wave of undocumented migrants that has arrived at the country's southern border.

More: The Pentagon concludes in a report that there is no evidence that UFOs are of extraterrestrial origin: "They are misidentified objects"

Trump also criticized Biden for apologizing for using the term illegal when referring to the suspect migrant when he spoke about the case in the State of the Union address last Thursday.

"These are undocumented people. I shouldn't have used illegal," the American president said this Saturday in an interview with MSNBC.

"I am going to say that he was an illegal immigrant, he should never have been in our country, and he would never have been in our country under Trump's policy," the Republican said amid applause.

He also promised to implement the largest deportation machine in history and added that if re-elected he will use all the tools at his disposal to get rid of "the monsters that Joe Biden released."

This Saturday, each of the aspirants differentiated their vision of the country and even that of their voters to consolidate themselves in Georgia, a state that in the past was a Republican stronghold, and where both campaigns are making great efforts.